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Transcript
ninth edition
STEPHEN P. ROBBINS
Chapter
14
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc.
All rights reserved.
MARY COULTER
Foundations of
Behavior
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook
The University of West Alabama
Why…?
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–2
LEARNING OUTLINE
Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter.
Why Look at Individual Behavior?
• Explain why the concept of an organization as an iceberg
is important to understanding organizational behavior.
• Describe the focus and the goals of organizational
behavior.
• Define the six important employee behaviors that
managers want to explain, predict, and influence.
Attitudes
• Describe the three components of an attitude.
• Discuss three job-related attitudes.
• Describe the impact job satisfaction has on employee
behavior.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–3
L E A R N I N G O U T L I N E (cont’d)
Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter.
Attitudes (cont’d)
• Explain how individuals reconcile inconsistencies
between attitudes and behavior.
•Personality
• Contrast the MBTI and the big-five model of personality.
• Describe the five personality traits that have proved to be
most powerful in explaining individual behavior in
organizations.
• Explain how emotions and emotional intelligence impact
behavior.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–4
L E A R N I N G O U T L I N E (cont’d)
Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter.
Perception
• Explain how an understanding of perception can help
managers.
• Describe the key elements of attribution theory.
• Discuss how the fundamental attribution error and selfserving bias can distort attributions.
• Name three shortcuts used in judging others.
Learning
• Explain how operant conditioning helps managers
understand, predict, and influence behavior.
• Describe the implications of social learning theory for
managing people at work.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–5
Why Look at Individual Behavior?
• Organizational Behavior (OB)
 The actions of people at work
• Focus of Organizational Behavior
 Individual behavior

Attitudes, personality, perception, learning, and motivation
 Group behavior

Norms, roles, team building, leadership, and conflict
• Goals of Organizational Behavior
 To explain, predict and influence behavior.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–6
Exhibit 14.1 The Organization as an Iceberg
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–7
Important Employee Behaviors
• Employee Productivity
 A performance measure of both efficiency and
effectiveness
• Absenteeism
 The failure to report to work when expected
• Turnover
 The voluntary and involuntary
permanent withdrawal from
an organization
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–8
Important Employee Behaviors (cont’d)
• Organizational Citizenship Behavior (OCB)
 Discretionary behavior that is not a part of an
employee’s formal job requirements, but which
promotes the effective functioning of the organization.
• Job Satisfaction
 The individual’s general attitude
toward his or her job
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–9
Important Employee Behaviors (cont’d)
• Workplace Misbehavior
 Any intentional employee behavior that has negative
consequences for the organization or individuals
within the organization.
 Types of Misbehavior

Deviance

Aggression

Antisocial behavior

Violence
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–10
Psychological Factors Affecting
Employee Behavior
• Attitudes
• Personality
• Perception
• Learning
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
• Employee
Productivity
• Absenteeism
• Turnover
• Organizational
Citizenship
• Job Satisfaction
• Workplace
Misbehavior
14–11
Psychological Factors
• Attitudes
 Evaluative statements—either favorable or
unfavorable—concerning objects, people, or events.
• Components Of An Attitude
 Cognitive component: the beliefs, opinions,
knowledge, or information held by a person.
 Affective component: the emotional or feeling part
of an attitude.
 Behavioral component: the intention to behave in a
certain way.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–12
Psychological Factors (cont’d)
• Job Satisfaction
 Job satisfaction is affected by level of income earned
and by the type of job a worker does.
• Job Satisfaction and Productivity
• Job Satisfaction and Absenteeism
• Job Satisfaction and Turnover
• Job Satisfaction and Customer Satisfaction
• Job Satisfaction and Workplace Misbehavior
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–13
Psychological Factors (cont’d)
• Job Involvement
 The degree to which an employee identifies with his
or her job, actively participates in it, and considers his
or her performance to be important to his or her selfworth.

High levels of commitment are related to fewer absences and
lower resignation rates.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–14
Psychological Factors (cont’d)
• Organizational Commitment
 Is the degree to which an employee identifies with a
particular organization and its goals and wishes to
maintain membership in the organization.
 Leads to lower levels of both absenteeism and
turnover.
 Could be becoming an outmoded measure as the
number of workers who change employers increases.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–15
Psychological Factors (cont’d)
• Perceived Organizational Support
 Is the general belief of employees that their
organization values their contribution and cares about
their well-being.
 Represents the commitment of the organization to the
employee.
 Providing high levels of support increases job
satisfaction and lower turnover.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–16
Attitudes and Consistency
• People seek consistency in two ways:
 Consistency among their attitudes.
 Consistency between their attitudes and behaviors.
• If an inconsistency arises, individuals:
 Alter their attitudes
or
 Alter their behavior
or
 Develop a rationalization for the inconsistency
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–17
The Importance of Attitudes
• Implication for Managers
 Attitudes warn of potential behavioral problems:

Managers should do things that generate the positive
attitudes that reduce absenteeism and turnover.
 Attitudes influence behaviors of employees:

Managers should focus on helping employees become more
productive to increase job satisfaction.
 Employees will try to reduce dissonance unless:

Managers identify the external sources of dissonance.

Managers provide rewards compensating for the dissonance.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–18
Personality
• Personality
 The unique combination of psychological
characteristics (measurable traits) that affect how a
person reacts and interacts with others.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–19
Classifying Personality Traits
• Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI®)
 A general personality assessment tool that
measures the personality of an individual using four
categories:

Social interaction: Extrovert or Introvert (E or I)

Preference for gathering data: Sensing or Intuitive (S or N)

Preference for decision making: Feeling or Thinking (F or T)

Style of decision making: Perceptive or Judgmental (P or J)
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–20
The Big-Five Model
• Extraversion
 Sociable, talkative, and
assertive
• Agreeableness
 Good-natured,
cooperative, and trusting
• Conscientiousness
• Emotional Stability
 Calm, enthusiastic, and
secure or tense, nervous,
and insecure
• Openness to Experience
 Imaginative, artistically
sensitive, and intellectual
 Responsible, dependable,
persistent, and
achievement oriented
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–21
Understanding Personality Differences
• Personality-Job Fit Theory (Holland)
 An employee’s job satisfaction and likelihood of
turnover depends on the compatibility of the
employee’s personality and occupation.
 Key points of the theory:
There are differences in personalities.
 There are different types of jobs.
 Job satisfaction and turnover are related to the match
between personality and job for an individual.

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–22
Perception
• Perception
 A process by which individuals give meaning (reality)
to their environment by organizing and interpreting
their sensory impressions.
• Factors influencing perception:
 The perceiver’s personal characteristics—interests,
biases and expectations
 The target’s characteristics—distinctiveness, contrast,
and similarity)
 The situation (context) factors—place, time,
location—draw attention or distract from the target
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–23
How We Perceive People
• Attribution Theory
 How the actions of individuals are perceived by others
depends on what meaning (causation) we attribute to
a given behavior.

Internally caused behavior: under the individual’s control

Externally caused behavior: due to outside factors
 Determining the source of behaviors:

Distinctiveness: different behaviors in different situations

Consensus: behaviors similar to others in same situation

Consistency: regularity of the same behavior over time
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–24
How We Perceive People (cont’d)
• Attribution Theory – errors and biases (cont’d)
 Fundamental attribution error

The tendency to underestimate the influence of external
factors and to overestimate the influence of internal or
personal factors.
 Self-serving bias

The tendency of individuals to attribute their successes to
internal factors while blaming personal failures on external
factors.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–25
Shortcuts Used in Judging Others
• Assumed Similarity
 Assuming that others are more like us than they
actually are.
• Stereotyping
 Judging someone on the basis of our perception of a
group he or she is a part of.
• Halo Effect
 Forming a general impression of a person on the
basis of a single characteristic of that person
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–26
Learning
• Learning
 Any relatively permanent change in behavior that
occurs as a result of experience.

Almost all complex behavior is learned.

Learning is a continuous, life-long process.

The principles of learning can be used to shape behavior
• Theories of learning:
 Operant conditioning
 Social learning
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–27
Summary
Why Look at Individual Behavior?
Attitudes
Personality
Perception
Learning
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
14–28